delivered the opinion of ■ the Court.
These cases present the question of the validity of
ad valorem,
tаxes upon crude oil belonging to petitioner, Indian Territory Illuminating Oil Company, and held by it in its storage tanks in Tulsa County and Payne County, Oklahoma. In each case, the tax was challenged upon the ground that the oil was exempt becausе in its production petitioner was operating as an instrumentality of the United States. The Supreme Court of Oklahoma sustained the taxes,
The facts are shоwn by ¿greed statements. The oil in question was assessed under the general laws of thе State for annual ad valorem taxes as a part of the personal property of petitioner within the respective counties. It constituted petitionеr’s share of oil which petitioner had produced from restricted Indian lands in Seminole County, Oklahoma, under leases which had been approved' by the Sеcretary of the Interior pursuant to the Act of Congress of May 27, 1908, 35 Stat. 312. In the Tulsa County case (No. 356) the assessment was for the year *327 1929 and inсluded 51,630 barrels of crude oil which had been produced from the restricted lаnds above mentioned during the period from March 31, 1927, ,to June 16, 1927. This oil on productiоn had been commingled with oil from petitioner’s “ commercial ” or unrestricted leasehold properties in Seminole County and had been immediately piped into petitioner’s storage tanks in Tulsa County where it Nad remained. At the timе of the removal of the oil, petitioner paid to the Superintendent of the Five Civilized Tribes for the lessors the agreed royalty of 12% per cent, of the gross proceeds, and the Indians owned no part of the oil in storage on January 1, 1929, the date of assessment, nor will they receive any part of the proceeds when the oil is sold by petitioner. In the Payne County case (No. 357) the question сoncerns 383,307 barrels of crude oil produced from the restricted lands prior to January 1, 1928 (the assessment date) and ' piped, with other oil, into petitioner’s storage .tanks in Payne County and there held.
In
Jaybird Mining Co.
v.
Weir,
There is a recognized distinction between a non-disсriminatory tax upon the property of an agent of govern
*328
ment, albeit the property is used in, or has relation to, the business of the agency—where thеre is only a remote, if any, influence upon the exercise of the functions of government—and a tax which is deemed to impose a direct burden upоn the exertion of governmental powers.
McCulloch
v.
Maryland,
Judgments affirmed.
